Inspiration from Spinning Maple Seeds

Submitted by Richard Smith on November 15, 2013 - 15:52

Looking to nature for inspiration (biomimicry) is nothing new. I've already covered turbine blades inspired by humpback whale fins and drag-reducing textures that mimic shark skin, so next up we have the elegant spinning maple seed.

Seed Aerodynamics

Known by many names, including samaras, spinning jennies, and whirlybirds (any more?), these marvels of aerodynamics disperse seeds far and wide in an attempt to maximize the chances of landing on fertile ground away from the parent tree. The seed has a mono-wing weighted such that it spins in a smooth motion and generates lift, prolonging its flight and increasing its chances of being carried to pastures new by a gust of wind.

Maple Seed

Lift is generated by a vortex that separates from the seed's leading edge and sits just above the wing's top surface. Interestingly this lift mechanism is also employed by insects and bats.

Applications

Given the rapid evolution of flying technology it was only a matter of time before researchers began to explore the maple seed's mono-wing as an alternative to traditional flying machines:

At the University of Queensland Robotics Design Lab researchers combined an inexpensive sensor and a mono-wing for a widely dispersed environmental sensor array called Samara.

Lockheed Martin combined a mono-wing with a propeller in a 30 cm drone called the Samarai. It can take off, maneuver, and land using a sophisticated control system, with the aim of performing surveillance operations.

The maple seed geometry for the CFD simulation was created in Caedium Professional. The CFD simulation was performed using the incompressible, steady-state RANS solver, with a Moving Reference Frame (MRF), and the k-omega SST turbulence model.